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Monday, January 19, 2015

Is Murder a “Sacred Practice" in All Religions? Rabbi Arthur Waskow




Alan: There's something essentially twisted in the psyche and spirit of a person who would kill his own son even if "God" told him to do it.

I suspect Abraham's willingness to commit this outrage is at the heart of the appalling treatment meted out by all three Abrahamic religions, especially among themselves. 

If God authorizes slaughter, are we not to behave in His image?

Worst Bible Passages
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2012/09/worst-bible-passages.html

Ex-Priest James Carroll: America's Unprecedented Threat Of Violence


"Martin Luther King Jr. On Hatred, Violence, Love and Jesus "The Way"

Christianity's Bedrock Commitment To Torture: Remaking Themselves In God's Image

Americans, Especially Catholics, Approve Of Inquisitorial Torture

"The Catholic Voice In The Torture Debate," John A. Coleman S.J.

Time To Expunge Catholicism Of Traditions & Texts That Represent God As A Terrorist

"Christian Conservatism: "The Saved," "The Damned," "The Rich," "The Poor"


Is Murder a “Sacred Practice" in ALL Religions?


The murderous attacks in France last week have called forth a mixture of horror, outrage, disgust, and fear – – all legitimate responses.
One response has been to claim that Islam is – uniquely — a religion of violence, terror, and war. Another has been to claim that the perpetrators of these murders, though they claimed they were acting for the honor of God and of Islam, were acting falsely, betraying the Islam that is entirely a religion of peace.
Both these responses evade the truth.
First of all, within Islamic teachings there are both passages of nurture and streaks of blood.
Some Muslims can authentically quote some bloody words to justify shedding the blood of other-belief believers   — especially those who drip contempt on Islam itself — just as other Muslims – by far the great majority — can quote passages that forbid such behavior.
Secondly, Islam is by no means unique among religions – and atheist societies, too — in having some adherents claim that violence, even aggressive violence not in self-defense, is taught by their sacred texts as in some circumstances a sacred practice.
Buddhists, Jews, Christians, Hindus, Sikhs have either called on their sacred teachings or acted as religious communities, invoking communal solidarity, to justify killing “Others,” while other Buddhists, Jews, Christians, Hindus, Sikhs have called on their sacred wisdom to forbid it.
(“Buddhists?? ” you say. “Come on!”  Well, check out what is going on this very moment in Burma, where a Buddhist majority, with the acquiescence or assistance of a Buddhist government, is carrying on massive pogroms against a Muslim minority.)
It is hard to find a major religion or secular ideology that has not been used by some of its adherents to justify violence against others.
Some atheists have used this fact to accuse religion itself of being the root of violence. But the blood-drenched history of the atheist government of the Soviet Union, drawing on what it saw as “sacred” teachings of Lenin and others about the need to “defend the revolution,” hardly supports that claim. Nor does the blood-drenched history of the non-religious government of the United States, proclaiming the “defense of democracy” as justification for wars against Vietnam, Iraq, and a number of Central American countries.
Why are there streaks of both blood and love in the histories of religious communities?
Most such communities begin with the deep discovery of the One that unites all life, whether that Unity is called “God ” or not. To celebrate that Unity, the community develops practices of compassion and justice, enriched by rituals, text, festivals, and other ways of keeping the knowledge of the One alive into future generations.
Then the community meets another community that claims to be in touch with the One. But this other community has developed different texts, different rituals and festivals and practices, to affirm the One.
There are two different ways of responding to this encounter.
One way is to say that the other community has it all wrong, because “we” know the right texts, festivals, and rituals to invoke the One. Not only are “they” wrong, they are lying when they claim to be in touch with the One. So they must be denigrated, attacked, even killed.
The other religious response is to say with delight that now we’ve learned how infinite is the One, how the Infinite One can only be expressed through many different forms. Through this response, the religious community finds itself drawn toward broadening its arena of compassion.
In most religious communities, both responses emerge again and again and again during generations of encounter with other communities.
We must also take into account that even in communities where the expansive and compassionate response to Otherness has won the day, some specific circumstances can lead to rage and violence. For religious leaders and communities are not immune to rage and violence when their beliefs and symbols are desecrated and they are humiliated.
Thought experiment: Imagine Christian “satirists” in a country with an isolated, low-income Jewish minority putting on a play that includes pouring sewage and pig-offal on a Torah Scroll.
How would various Jews react? Might some demand laws to forbid such versions of  “free speech”? Might some use violence?
In fact, many European countries — remembering how the Holocaust began with such acts of “free speech” (and drawing on a different approach to freedom of expression than the US First Amendment) now forbid certain versions of free speech when used against one or another religion  — such as Holocuast denial. Was Charlie Hebdo immune to these laws because it poured contempt on ALL religions, not just one? 
And then some reasons for the use of violence by some who claim to be acting on behalf of a religious community might not be called “religious” in origin but emerge from the economic, political, or cultural marginalization of a religious community. Religious communities that are kept in poverty or denied a share in shaping the future of their country or even their own community are not immune to feeling rage and using violence.
Does any of this justify violence? No. Does any of it justify the murders of Charlie’s writers and cartoonists or of the Jewish customers at a kosher grocery store?? NO.  Does any of it justify arson attacks on mosques or the criminalization of wearing the hijab? NO.
But these thoughts might point us in the direction of better ways of dealing with outbursts of religious violence. I pose five questions toward that possibility:
Question 1: Even where it is legal to pour contempt on one religion or on them all, is it wise? Is it compassionate?  Should society applaud and encourage such vitriol, or oppose it?
Question 2: In every religious and ideological community, should its leaders be explicitly celebrating the Infinitude of the One, and thus Its manifestations in many different forms – rather than attacking difference as evidence of apostasy and heresy and falsity?
Question 3: Should those who are powerful in every society be acting to ensure that no community – religious, racial, sexual, lingual – be excluded from economic justice, cultural dignity, and political empowerment?
Question 4: Should the same rule be applied internationally and globally, so that no nation, however much a Great Power, can trample on another?
Question 5: Does all this point us in the direction of elevating the principle and practice of nonviolence into a more and more central precept of all religions and ideologies?

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